Germany to Provide €50 Billion Loan for Ukraine’s Large-Scale Weapon Purchases

Authored by united24media.com and submitted by Netlar2686
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German Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced that Germany will continue its support for Ukraine by pursuing an additional loan of 50 billion euros from the Group of Seven (G7). Scholz’s remarks were shared through the publication ZMI, highlighting Germany’s ongoing commitment to aiding Ukraine.

In a statement on Twitter (X), Scholz emphasized that Germany remains one of Ukraine’s most significant European supporters. “We will maintain our support by seeking an additional loan of 50 billion euros from the G7. This funding will enable Ukraine to acquire extensive armor and other resources,” Scholz wrote.

Previously, Bild and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported on Germany’s potential plans to halt military assistance to Ukraine starting in 2025. According to FAZ, both Chancellor Scholz and Finance Minister Christian Lindner have frozen all new funding requests.

Heorhii Tykhyi, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine criticized these reports as being misleading.

The Ministry of Finance noted that assistance from the Federal Reserve Fund would likely be redirected to international programs. It is anticipated that the G7's decision could involve providing Ukraine with loans derived from frozen Russian assets.

On August 19, Germany announced a new military aid package for Ukraine. According to a statement from the German government, this package includes various military components, including an IRIS-T air defense system and other resources.

Itakie on August 20th, 2024 at 17:45 UTC »

Headline is kinda misleading.

In a statement on Twitter (X), Scholz emphasized that Germany remains one of Ukraine’s most significant European supporters. “We will maintain our support by seeking an additional loan of 50 billion euros from the G7. This funding will enable Ukraine to acquire extensive armor and other resources,” Scholz wrote.

Previously, Bild and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported on Germany’s potential plans to halt military assistance to Ukraine starting in 2025. According to FAZ, both Chancellor Scholz and Finance Minister Christian Lindner have frozen all new funding requests.

We ARE cutting the assistance in the upcoming years. The idea is to use the frozen Russian central bank money for ukraine instead. Atleast their yields/interests (annual returns of 2.5 to 3 billion euros) which should be legal to use. To quote the german newspaper FAZ:

The concept decided upon by the G-7 governments is to use this basis to put together a double-digit billion dollar loan for Ukraine. The interest on the Russian assets is to serve as collateral or as interest payments to the lenders; there is talk of a securitization instrument. The United States favors the model in which the lenders issue a bond. They would then receive 50 billion dollars from the bond subscribers on the international financial markets and pay this annually with the interest from the Russian central bank's assets.

But the devil is, as always, in the details. Should the United States , the EU or all G-7 countries together grant the loan? For what period and interest rate? Whoever grants the loan would first increase its own debt. In the spring, Brussels was still pushing for financing from the USA and promised guarantees that the proceeds from Europe would flow to the United States.

But the Americans are also concerned about Hungary's possible withdrawal, because the European sanctions regime against Russia must be renewed by vote every six months. EU ambassadors are currently discussing an extension of this deadline. Another option would be for the EU to jointly take on debt and lend it to Ukraine. But this option was not met with great enthusiasm in Germany, at least in the spring, according to negotiating circles. Finance Minister Christian Lindner in particular, who is now hoping for the international loan, is said to have been skeptical about joint EU borrowing. Meanwhile, the Belgian government is pushing for Euroclear not to be left with incalculable risks.

IWASJUMP on August 20th, 2024 at 17:39 UTC »

That is actually huge from Getmany, as the US late 2023 approved amount was 61B.

Emperor_Bly on August 20th, 2024 at 15:38 UTC »

How about we like...get over all this mess with a peace deal and go back to normal 🗿